I am reading a most fascinating oral history of the Amoskeag Textile Mills
in Manchester, NH. They were around from about the 1830s to the 1930s; at
their peak they were the largest textile mill in the world with 17,000
workers, a million spiindles, etc. There are so many aspects of what has
been discussed here that are manifested in these oral histories. One gets
what I believe must be a rather complete picture from top management down to
the lowliest worker and horizontally across that entire world at the time
from the apartments owned by the company to the relationships with the city
that was virtually founded by the mill owners, etc.

A wonderful read.

Selma


----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Weick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Brad McCormick, Ed.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Charles Brass"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2003 3:27 PM
Subject: Re: [Futurework] The world of work


>
> Brad McCormick:
>
> > My understanding of pre-Industrial (pre-Enclosure, etc.) life
> > is a bit different: more like Brueghel paintings of peasants
> > working-and-playing.  Not what I would aspire to, but a lot
> > better than being an early industrial worker.
> >
> > I read the stuff a long time ago, so the references are
> > lost, but a large part of the "moral" rationalization of the
> > industrial system was that the peasants worked little and
> > drank/screwed a lot.  My understanding is that
> > peasants worked far fewer hours than early industrial
> > workers.
>
> I don't disagree that peasants had their good times, like those Breughel
> depicts in his paintings, but there were also very bad times.  Being at
the
> bottom of the European class system prior to the industrial revolution
meant
> that you could suffer famines, wars, dispossession and general kicking
> around.  My own ancestors left Wuerttemburg or the southern Rhineland
> probably in about 1815 or 1820 because the area had overrun by Napoleon,
had
> been pillaged blind by contending armies, had suffered crop failures and
> starvation and was not a good place to live.  Next, they appear to have
> found themselves in central Germany, near Halle.  I have no idea of what
> they did there, or how they lived, but when Allexander II of Russia freed
> the serfs in the early 1860s the family migrated to the Ukraine to take up
> agricultural work.  The conditions under which they lived and worked while
> there proved absolutely miserable and by the 1890s, they'd had enough and
> started back to Germany.  By then central and eastern Europe had
> industrialized and they wound up living and working in a textile center
near
> Lodz, Poland.  My grandfather migrated to Canada in 1913, but my
grandmother
> and their seven kids remained stuck in one of the war zones of WWI.  Most
of
> them didn't make it to Canada until the later 1920s.
>
> I'm not saying that my family was chronically unhappy.  It's probable
that,
> as it moved around, it's various members had good times and bad, perhaps
> played music and danced, and probably went to church and commented
> unfavourably on those who didn't.  But everything I heard my grandparents
> say when I was a child suggested hard, hard times.  Working in the textile
> industry near Lodz was one of their better times because they could save a
> little money, enough for my grandfather to buy passage to Canada, and
> because several family members could get work.  My father, who was small,
> agile and clever, began work in the textile mill at age seven because kids
> were needed to crawl into machinery and fix it so that it would not have
to
> be shut down.
>
> Breughel, who lived in the 16th Century when times may have been better,
> painted happy peasants dancing.  However, he also knew about the other
side
> of life.  To see what I mean, go to: http://artchive.com/ftp_site.htm .
>
> Ed
>
> Ed Weick
> 577 Melbourne Ave.
> Ottawa, ON, K2A 1W7
> Canada
> Phone (613) 728 4630
> Fax     (613)  728 9382
>
>
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